Tuesday, January 17, 2017

PT-3 "Jesus Christ in Relation to God" (Col. 1:15)


SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 1/17/2017 10:54 PM

My Worship Time                                                   Focus: PT-3 “Jesus Christ in Relation to God” 

Bible Reading & Meditation                                     Reference:  Colossians 1:15

            Message of the verses:  “15 He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation.”

            We are actually working on our third SD for this one verse in Colossians chapter one, and I promised to give a rather long quote from John MacArthur’s commentary in order to finish looking at this verse.  This could be said that it is one of the most important verses in the Word of God that shows Jesus Christ’s deity and so that is why we have taken the time to look at it.  I have to say that there are many quotes from John MacArthur and even Warren Wiersbe in my Spiritual Diaries and I have mentioned in earlier SD’s that the most important thing that I desire to do as I write these Spiritual Diaries is to show the truth of Scripture.  I don’t want to put any false information on my Spiritual Diaries as it is important for me that those who read these SD’s realize that I seed to put the truth on them.

            Now we have been talking about the term “firstborn” in our last SD and so with that said I begin the quote from John MacArthur’s commentary:  “There are many other reasons for rejecting the idea that the use of firstborn makes Jesus a created begin.  Such an interpretation cannot be harmonized with the description of Jesus as monogenes )’only begotten,’ or ‘unique’) in John 1:18.  We might well ask with the early church Father Theodoret how, if Christ was only-begotten, could He be only-begotten?  How could He be the first of many in His class, and at the same time the only member of His class?  Yet such confusion is inevitable if we assign the meaning ‘first created’ to ‘firstborn.’  Further, when the prototokos is one of the class referred to, the class is plural (cf. Col. 1:18; Rom. 8:29).  Yet, creation is singular.  Finally, if Paul meant to convey that Christ was the first created being, why did he not use the Greek word protoktistos, which means ‘first created?’

            “Such an interpretation of prototokos is also foreign to the context—both the general context of the epistle and the specific context of the passage.  If Paul were here teaching that Christ is a created being, he would be agreeing with the central point of the Colossians errorists.  They taught that Christ was a created being, the most prominent of the emanations from God.  That would run counter to his purpose in writing Colossians, which was to refute the false teachers at Colossae.

            “Interpreting prototokos to mean that Christ is a created being is also out of harmony with the immediate context.  Paul has just finished describing Christ as the perfect and complete image of God.  In the next verse, he refers to Christ as the creator of everything that exists.  How then could Christ Himself be a created being?  Further, verse 17 states, ‘He is before all things.’  Christ existed before anything else was created (cf. Micah 5:2).  And only God existed before the creation.

            “Far from being one of a series of emanations descending from God, Jesus is the perfect image of God.  He is the preeminent inheritor over all creation (the genitive ktiseos is better translated ‘over’ than ‘of’).  He both existed before the creation and is exalted in rank above it.  Those truths define who Jesus is in relation to God.  They also devastate the false teachers’ position.  But Paul is not finished—his next point undermines another false teaching of the Colossians errorists.”

            False teachers have the tendency of pulling one verse out of a paragraph and try to make is say something that it is not saying at all, as I think is the case here.

1/17/2017 11:20 PM

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